ONTD

11:13 am - 01/02/2012

Angelina Jolie, actors discuss 'Blood and Honey'


     Angelina Jolie with Goran Jevtic <3      


As a goodwill ambassador for the U.N. high commissioner for refugees, Angelina Jolie has visited many post-conflict regions, among them Bosnia-Herzegovina. What she learned there about a war between neighbors haunted her so much, she had to express her thoughts in her first screenplay.

"I spoke to people from the U.N., from governments to victims to reporters ... and to the cast, many of whom lived through it, and all were affected by it. So it's full of those stories," Jolie says of "In the Land of Blood and Honey," which also marks her directorial debut.

"One story in particular, from one of the victims, was the human shield scene - that's from a personal account. Having to watch the older women strip and dance naked was a personal account. (One actress) lived through the siege of Sarajevo and went back and forth through Sniper Alley, so when we had to do her going to get the medicine, she had to direct me in how to direct her."

"Blood and Honey's" actors all come from the region, which lent authenticity, but also stirred deep emotions. The film does not shy from depicting some of the horrors of the Bosnian War, particularly the use of mass rape as a weapon.

"I would have never been in it if I felt it wasn't truthful," says lead actress Zana Marjanovic (ZAH-nah mar-YAHN-uh-vitch). "Because I am Bosnian and because it is recent history, but primarily because I am an artist, I feel you have to be aware of your choices. It's very important; it affects people."



Relationship changes

Marjanovic plays Ajla, a Muslim artist involved with Serbian police Officer Danijel (Goran Kostic), in the days before the conflict. Once the war erupts, their relationship changes in strange and complex ways. The actress, herself a Bosnian Muslim, says revisiting those peaceful days was moving.

"It was very emotional when we were doing it - I'm saying it now without crying," says Marjanovic, as both women laugh, "but usually it's very hard for me to even think about it. It's when everything was fine. It sounds like a fairy tale now, but it was just normal. No one said we were happy; we just were. No one ever believed all of that could be taken away from you, and so quickly.

"The funny thing is, most people I know just kept thinking it would end the next day. It was just some conflict by some people who are creating problems where there aren't any. But it ended up taking a lot longer."

Jolie wasn't convinced she had written something for public consumption until someone she knew with experience in the business promoted the idea.

"Brad (Pitt) saw it and said, 'It's not that bad, honey, you might want to send it out and see what response you get.' I said, 'Well, I'm not doing it without the people from the country. If people from all sides agree to make it, then we'll do it. If they don't, we'll burn it.' "

Too close

Jolie ultimately decided she was too close to it to relinquish the film to another director.

"Every day I learned so much. I mean, everything," says the Oscar-winning actress, laughing. "I had to understand the camera, shot lists - how to make a shot list. The first time I said, 'Action,' nobody could hear me because I wasn't loud enough. How to do sound, color timing.

"Once the girls said, 'We need more of a scene at the top of this section.' And I said, 'Yeah, we do ...' And then I realized, 'Oh, I'm the writer! Give me a half an hour, I'll try to come up with something.' "

Marjanovic says she believed in the neophyte director because of what the script showed her.

"I remember sitting on the floor" after reading it, she says. " 'OK, someone's going to come in and I'm not really ready to talk to anyone,' because I was deeply affected by it. It was really difficult for me. You're really happy, at the same time, that there is a script that represents the country I was born in."

Part of that representation was a multifaceted depiction of Bosnian Serbs.


"Some people really like films to be black and white or else it doesn't take a hard enough line for them," says Jolie. "We feel like there's too much black and white in discussion about war and we wanted to make sure we did show the humanity on all sides, in each character, and give each character a particular voice, and that the voices would balance each other."

Difficult scenes

Jolie points out that Marjanovic and Kostic were born in the same hospital. Kostic's journey was quite different from Marjanovic's, however: The Muslim actress' family escaped to neighboring Slovenia; Serbian Kostic left for London before the war while his father continued his family's long military tradition. So playing the role of a Serbian army captain in the midst of atrocities was particularly difficult.

"He would apologize before the scene and then he would apologize after," says Marjanovic of a key moment in which Serbian soldiers horrendously mistreat Muslim women in a detention camp. "In the beginning, he would stand far away from me and try and do something we had to be closer for - 'Why are you standing so far away from me?' 'Oh yes, can I come closer to you?' 'You have to!' 'Thank you for telling me that.' To have such a partner and colleague, it makes it a safe environment for me to be as vulnerable and as fragile as I needed to be."

"They hated doing that to the women, because they're good men," says Jolie, whose movie has been nominated for a Golden Globe for best foreign language film. "Yet they knew that if they did it, with the aggression necessary, it was telling the right story and it was actually a gift to the women." {sbox}

In the Land of Blood and Honey (R) opens Friday at Bay Area theaters.

To see a trailer, go to www.inthelandofbloodandhoney.com.

Zana Marjanovic

Born: May 31, 1983, Sarajevo, (now) Bosnia-Herzegovina

How she landed this breakthrough role: Writer-director Angelina Jolie says, "I thought she was so the character. And I had seen her other work ... and I knew she was a great actress. And I knew from (the casting director) that she was a lovely person. It was so demanding for an actress from the region, what she was going to have to go through, so it doesn't matter if it's a big part, it still takes someone courageous to decide, 'I'm going to do this. I'm going to lay myself out there physically and emotionally naked and be everything this film needs me to be.' "

Quotable: On the depiction of Serbs in "Blood and Honey," Jolie cites a scene with a Bosnian Muslim group in which one character says, " 'My mother's a Serb. I can't hate all Serbs.' And another says, 'Not all Serbs - Chetnik Serbs. I don't hate all Serbs.' The actors wrote those lines. And they wrote them to make sure that message is sent: ... 'We are not defining an entire people. We don't hate all people who are Serbs. ... We are still mixed.' This is so complicated, when you ask people. All of the cast was born Yugoslavian, and now they are all called something different."


source. 


[info]chasitydoll85 2nd-Jan-2012 01:34 pm (UTC)
The trailer looked good, I might check it out.
[info]x_butterfly19_x 2nd-Jan-2012 01:43 pm (UTC)
Any verdict on whether this film meant to be good, or a hot mess?
[info]le_milkshake 2nd-Jan-2012 02:03 pm (UTC)
It's got a 57 on metacritic, with the highest score being 83% and the lowest being 10%. So from the looks of it it's a love it or hate it kind of deal.
[info]x_butterfly19_x 2nd-Jan-2012 02:32 pm (UTC)
ty ty
[info]x_butterfly19_x 2nd-Jan-2012 02:33 pm (UTC)
thank you!
[info]zanzou_chan 2nd-Jan-2012 02:28 pm (UTC)
the locals loved it, critics have been very divided, but the negative things I've heard have included talk such as "Why are we talking about the Bosnian war now, AJ is just stirring up old shit" or some such, and therefore were not legit in my eyes.
[info]x_butterfly19_x 2nd-Jan-2012 02:33 pm (UTC)
Ah it's good the locals liked it.
[info]dannyupshaw 2nd-Jan-2012 03:02 pm (UTC)
the locals? who?
[info]belkisa 2nd-Jan-2012 04:17 pm (UTC)
Bosnian War Victims liked it

http://ohnotheydidnt.livejournal.com/64991571.html
[info]clothingaddict 2nd-Jan-2012 06:51 pm (UTC)
"Stirring up old shit?" Ugh, I find this comment so hypocritical. No one would have dared to say that about the 21323424 WWI/II movies that are constantly being made. War is war and history should never be ignored or forgotten.
[info]ishachan 2nd-Jan-2012 07:26 pm (UTC)
mte. Plus to the people who actually lived through those wars it's never going to be "stirring up old shit" to them.
[info]malocudoviste 2nd-Jan-2012 01:51 pm (UTC)
I wanna see the Bosnian version of the trailer,I wasn't too impressed with the English one
[info]omgitsalexis 2nd-Jan-2012 01:59 pm (UTC)
why does this bitch always make it hard for me to hate her?
[info]smolderhotter 2nd-Jan-2012 02:05 pm (UTC)
because she's flawless
[info]elenielofnarnia 2nd-Jan-2012 05:20 pm (UTC)
Ikr? Jeez Angelina... ♥
[info]infinite_drag 2nd-Jan-2012 05:22 pm (UTC)
this.

[info]hellb 3rd-Jan-2012 02:03 pm (UTC)
It ain't difficult. You're just not trying hard enough...
[info]whoamelly_nyc 2nd-Jan-2012 02:06 pm (UTC)
Hmmm dunno if I would see this in the theater, but I'm sure I'll watch it eventually... Curious to see Angie as a director...
[info]qween_tartii 2nd-Jan-2012 02:21 pm (UTC)
Y'know what, I really respect her for this. She could have played it safe, and done it as a vanity piece, and cast a whole load of her A-list pals. But she seems really committed to telling the story truthfully, with local actors who actually lived through what they're portraying on film - no matter how good or bad the film is, I think that's worth some props.
[info]enid_keaner 2nd-Jan-2012 02:54 pm (UTC)
That's exactly how I feel and one reason I'll be watching it. She really could have just given it the Hollywood shine - it would have been way easier for her if she'd done so - but she chose not to.
[info]cigarettelover 2nd-Jan-2012 02:28 pm (UTC)
Omg lol I can't believe I am seeing Goran Jevtic on ONTD <3
[info]smolderhotter 2nd-Jan-2012 02:51 pm (UTC)
he's flawless <3
[info]liquiddatura 2nd-Jan-2012 02:30 pm (UTC)
I see "Blood and Honey" and I think "Honey Blood."

[info]midsummerain 2nd-Jan-2012 02:54 pm (UTC)
I really want to see this, but I have a hard time stomaching anything that involves human rights abuses. I will probably do the same thing with this movie that I did with Lilja 4-Ever: keep it forever, continue building up the strength to see it, and then eventually force myself to see it.
[info]la_petite_singe 2nd-Jan-2012 04:02 pm (UTC)
I saw this the other night; it was pretty solid, if not great. I think the trailer's sort of misleading--it's not really a sweet love story in the middle of war, it's very tempestuous and they both kind of use each other, and yet care about each other at the same time. Stylistically I was really impressed, though; it didn't feel like a first-time director at all.
[info]nasstasja_sk 2nd-Jan-2012 07:00 pm (UTC)
Opet.
[info]prophecypro 2nd-Jan-2012 10:00 pm (UTC)
Kinda curious to see this and how it turned out
[info]yhbt 3rd-Jan-2012 04:34 am (UTC)
The Bosnian war is definitely a story that needs telling in the west... so many stories of that part of the world need telling. So kudos to Angie; I don't really like her, but I want to see this movie. I'm glad she's being so careful to have the people from Bosnia actually involved in telling their own story...
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